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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy reach agreement in principle to lift debt limit for two years

US president urged House and Senate to pass agreement in late-night statement issued by White House, saying it would prevent catastrophic default

Jim Tankersley, Catie Edmondson, Luke Broadwater Washington Published 29.05.23, 04:33 AM
Biden (right) with McCarthy in Washington on May 22

Biden (right) with McCarthy in Washington on May 22 Reuters

US President Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Saturday reached an agreement in principle to lift the debt limit for two years while cutting and capping some government spending over the same period, a breakthrough after a marathon set of crisis talks that has brought the nation within days of its first default in history.

Congressional passage of the plan before June 5, when the US Treasury is projected to exhaust its ability to pay its obligations, is not assured, particularly in the House, which plans to consider it on Wednesday.

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Republicans hold a narrow majority in the chamber, and Right-wing lawmakers who had demanded significantly larger budget cuts in exchange for lifting the borrowing limit were already in revolt.

But the compromise, which would effectively freeze federal spending that had been on track to grow, had the blessing of both the Democratic president and the Republican Speaker, raising hopes that it could break the fiscal stalemate that has gripped Washington and the nation for weeks, threatening an economic crisis.

Biden urged the House and Senate to pass the agreement in a late-night statement issued by the White House, saying it would prevent a catastrophic default.

“It is an important step forward that reduces spending while protecting critical programmes for working people and growing the economy for everyone,” Biden said.

“And the agreement protects my and congressional Democrats’ key priorities and legislative accomplishments. The agreement represents a compromise, which means not everyone gets what they want.”

Biden and McCarthy spoke by phone on Saturday to resolve final sticking points.

In a nighttime news conference outside his Capitol office that lasted just one minute, McCarthy said the deal contained “historic reductions in spending, consequential reforms that will lift people out of poverty into the work force, rein in government overreach” and would add no new taxes. He declined to answer questions or provide specifics, but said he planned to release legislative text on Sunday.

“We still have more work to do tonight to finish all the writing of it,” he said.

The plan was structured with the aim of enticing votes from both parties, though it has drawn the ire not only of conservative Republicans but also Democrats furious at being asked to vote for cuts they oppose with the threat of default looming.

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